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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Duncan, in NW visit, urges cash for schools

  U.S. Department of Education Secretary Arne Duncan, second from left foreground, reacts after scoring a goal using computer controls for a robot  as Sen. Patty Murray  and others look on at Aviation High School in Des Moines, Wash., on Friday.
Donna Gordon Blankinship Associated Press

DES MOINES, Wash. – U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan urged Congress on Friday to act soon to increase education funding because cash-strapped states can’t wait until the fall to determine if they must lay off thousands of teachers.

Duncan made his remarks at a forum on innovation in education at Aviation High School in Des Moines, a small college prep school that focuses on science, technology and mathematics.

At the forum, U.S. Sen. Patty Murray said she hopes fellow lawmakers spent their Fourth of July break hearing from parents and teachers, like she did. Murray said if they got the message about how urgent the school budget crisis is, they will return to Washington, D.C., with the drive to find more money for schools.

Murray and Duncan both said many different proposals to pay for the emergency dollars are on the table.

“He and I have to go back to Washington and make this work,” the senator said.

Several dozen teachers and others held signs and chanted outside the school to protest Race to the Top and demand changes in the upcoming overhaul of the No Child Left Behind act. Some people inside the auditorium also expressed skepticism about education reform.

“I’m very concerned. We have a lot of kids who don’t know how to engage with schools like this,” said Don Rivers, a Seattle man who works for an organization that monitors school improvement. Rivers is also a candidate for Congress in Washington’s 7th District.

Students packed the auditorium for a chance to meet Duncan and show off their school. They spoke of the way their teachers taught them to not be afraid of trying new things and skills they picked up while believing they were just building rockets or doing chemistry experiments.

“The only way to learn is by failing,” said Navid Damshee, whose remark inspired talk about education innovation and the need for experimentation and potential failure.

Duncan said he was impressed by the high school and would like to see a hundred more schools like it across the country.

“This is a model for the country, absolutely,” he said.